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The SkipLast Extension Method

When writing queries, just as you sometimes want to skip the first n items in a collection, on occasion you want to skip the last n items.  You could certain count the items remaining in the collection, and use the Take operator to take all but the last, but this would mean iterating the collection twice, and would result in uglier code.  This post presents the SkipLast Extension method, which allows you to skip the last n items.

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Blog TOCIn the next post, I’m going to present an enhancement to LtxOpenXml classes, which use LINQ to XML to query Open XML documents, to allow you to write queries on tables within spreadsheet (XLSX) documents.  I needed SkipLast to implement this.

Here is the implementation of the extension method, and a couple of examples of its use:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Collections.Specialized;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;

publicstaticclassMyExtensions
{
publicstaticIEnumerable<T> SkipLast<T>(thisIEnumerable<T> source,
int count)
{
Queue<T> saveList = newQueue<T>();
int saved = 0;
foreach (T item in source)
{
if (saved < count)
{
saveList.Enqueue(item);
++saved;
continue;
}
saveList.Enqueue(item);
yieldreturn saveList.Dequeue();
}
yieldbreak;
}
}

classProgram
{
staticvoid Main(string[] args)
{
int[] a = new[] { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
var b = a.SkipLast(2);
foreach (var item in b)
Console.WriteLine(item);

List<string> c = newList<string>() {
"one", "two", "three", "four", "five"
};
var d = c.Skip(1).SkipLast(1);
foreach (var e in d)
Console.WriteLine(e);
}
}

This example outputs:

1
2
3
two
three
four

Code is attached.

SkipLast.cs

Comments

  • Anonymous
    November 14, 2008
    PingBack from http://blogs.msdn.com/ericwhite/archive/2008/10/20/eric-white-s-blog-s-table-of-contents.aspx

  • Anonymous
    November 14, 2008
    Would it be more appropriate to use a Queue<T>, rather than a List<T>?  The implementation would be   Queue<T> saveList = new Queue<T>();        int saved = 0;        foreach (T item in source)        {            if (saved < count)            {                saveList.Add(item);                ++saved;                continue;            }            saveList.Enque(item);            yield return saveList.Deque();        }        yield break;

  • Anonymous
    November 14, 2008
    Ben, You are absolutely right, a Queue<T> is the better collection to use.  I've updated the post with a new implementation. Thanks, Eric

  • Anonymous
    December 17, 2010
    You can make it a bit more efficient with a few small changes:        // presize the queue (+1 since we enq before we deq)        Queue<T> saveList = new Queue<T>(count+1);          foreach (T item in source)        {            // we always enq. no sense wait till after the if()            saveList.Enqueue(item);            if (count-- > 0)                continue;            yield return saveList.Dequeue();        }